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Kaufman and Williams present critical issues in international relations through an intersectional approach that examines race, gender, class, ethnicity, and power to arrive at better explanations for such core IR issues as war and peace, security, human rights, development and international political economy, and the global environment.
Their approach builds on early calls amongst feminist IR theorists, imploring “Where are the women?” It is only fairly recently that students of IR have broadened the approach to the field to incorporate the dimensions of race, ethnicity, and class as well as gender. Kaufman and Williams help guide readers exploring questions like: How does gender matter for understanding war and peace? How does race matter? Where are the men? What is intersectionality in IR? How does an intersectional approach change or broaden our understanding of international relations?
Published | Sep 27 2024 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 186 |
ISBN | 9781538182123 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Illustrations | 17 BW Illustrations, 1 Map |
Dimensions | 0 x 0 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Kaufman and Williams offer a much-needed and accessible examination of International Relations, explaining the myriad ways in which gender, race, empire, and power intersect and shape the core of every key issue in the field of International Relations. Gender, Race, and Power should be essential reading for every Introduction to IR course.
Kerry F. Crawford, James Madison University
Kaufman and Williams present a powerful pedagogical tool for students of gender and IR. Both challenging and robust, this textbook does not hesitate to challenge many preconceptions in the fields of political and IR theory with their intersectional approach. This will be a seminal book for students and faculty who wish to develop a nuanced understanding of the politics-policy-ethics nexus of the security debate.
Elisabeth Hope Murray, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Gender, Race, and Power: Examining IR through an Intersectional Lens models an approach of grounding research on international relations with an intersectional theoretical framework. By using intersectionality as a guide for understanding complex and global case-studies, Kaufman and Williams reveal important power disparities that must be understood if we are invested in understanding inequities around the globe. Intersectionality is a thread that connects each of these case-studies to the study of power and how it manifests across different contexts of human security, the global economy, climate change and more. International relations cannot be fully understood without attention to intersectionality, and Kaufman and Williams illuminate why this theoretical approach is so important for understanding global problems and solutions.
Margaret Perez Brower, University of Washington
With Gender, Race, and Power,Kaufman and Williams take a delightful step in the direction of a genuinely plural IR. This is a book built from real curiosity, heterodoxy, and collaboration. It positively brims with important and timely discussion, on such diverse topics as war, peace, intervention, economy, and environment. Kaufman and Williams are not trying to undo IR, but to show how intersectional analysis, developed out of feminist and postcolonial research, answers questions in and of world politics in empirically and intellectually impactful ways. Gender, Race, and Power is a wonderful contribution, a must-read for anyone interested in expanding their international relations horizons.
Penny Griffin, University of New South Wales, Australia
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